Pix That Make You LOL-Warning-SNWS

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
My ex-wife started taking flying lessons about the time our divorce started and she got her license shortly before our divorce was final, later that same year.

Yesterday afternoon, she narrowly escaped injury in the aircraft she was piloting when she was forced to make an emergency landing in Southern Tennessee because of bad weather. Thank God our kids were with me at the Beach House this weekend.
The absence of a post-crash fire was likely due to insufficient fuel on board. No one on the ground was injured.Photographs below were taken at the scene show the extent of damage to her aircraft.
She was very lucky.











































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imchucky666

Well-Known Member
My ex-wife started taking flying lessons about the time our divorce started and she got her license shortly before our divorce was final, later that same year.

Yesterday afternoon, she narrowly escaped injury in the aircraft she was piloting when she was forced to make an emergency landing in Southern Tennessee because of bad weather. Thank God our kids were with me at the Beach House this weekend.
The absence of a post-crash fire was likely due to insufficient fuel on board. No one on the ground was injured.Photographs below were taken at the scene show the extent of damage to her aircraft.
She was very lucky.











































View attachment 2394551
This was a good one, (I think I also posted it a few pages back in your absence), but still good.:-P
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Dang, WW. Those are candidates for the Beautiful thread.

I couldn't spot the marmot, but i saw the rock chuck at once! Once a varmint hunter, always a varmint hunter. cn
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Once a Heron user ... always a Heron user. ~cackle~ He's *just* right and up from the photo's precise center.

That flatfish reminds me of something I saw while snorkeling on my honeymoon. (Guess who didn't wear a T-shirt. Neither of us could lie on our back for a week, which on a honeymoon is tough.) I found one of those tropical flatfish ... basically a perfect patch of sand, but with eyes and these arresting bright blue circles. I played a brief game of Bother with him, and at one point he swam from sand over a dark gravel patch. I am not sure if I am remembering this right, but I almost *swear* that as he swam over the dividing line ... the part of his body over the rocks was dark, but the part still over sand didn't change. In retrospect, I'm not convinced I saw that because a fish's vision is effectively a point sense ... no way for the animal to track the transition. But the speed of his color/pattern changes was awesome. cn
 
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